Whole Wheat Pizza with Chipotle Pizza Sauce

by Angela on January 3, 2010

in $$$, Baked Goods, Main Course, Recipes by Budget

I got a new flash for my camera for my birthday. Tonight I experimented with it while making homemade pizzas at night in the kitchen. I was pleased with the results; even more importantly, so was Graham.

DSC_0090

For the pizza crust, I used Mark Bittman’s Pizza Dough recipe, making modifications so it was a whole wheat crust (per Bittman) and because I can’t seem to follow directions (which turned out nicely anyway).

Whole Wheat Flour

Dough - Pre Rising

Bittman recommends using your food processor for making the dough. Turns out, the food processor makes making dough about a billion times easier than it would be otherwise. Such a wise man that Mark Bittman.

In the Food Processor

The dough had to spend 1-2 hours rising for the first time. What was I to do?  I made homemade pizza sauce.

Homemade Chipotle Pizza Sauce

At the last minute, I added in some chipotle peppers thinking that the smoky flavor would bring out the nuttiness of the whole crust. Turned out I was right.

Cooked Chipotle Peppers

Pizza sauce simmering, I prepared the other toppings.  We used fresh mozzarella, but the pictures didn’t turn out so great.

Mozzarella

I’m such a good pescatarian wife – look what I bought for my carnivore husband.

Sopresseta

Humanely raised sopressata, untreated by antibiotics. (A trade off he doesn’t care much about, even if I do.) (By the way, don’t click that link unless you want to see salami being made.)

Angela's Shrimp, Jalepeno, Cilantro & Mozzerella Pizza on a Whole Wheat Crust

We live in Texas, where jalapenos are almost state law. We had to include them on the pizza.

But I’m getting ahead of myself.

Dough - Pre Rising

Meanwhile, after the dough spent all that time rising, I divided it up and threw half in the freezer for future pizza nights.  Graham missed a large part of kindergarten, so he says he doesn’t know how to share. I made him his own little pizza so he didn’t have to learn.

Pre Pizza Cookin'

Graham’s is on the left, mine is on the right.  What you can’t see here is that his is twice as big as mine.

We put ‘em in the oven, where they baked for ~11 minutes.  By this point, it was after 8 pm – we were starving, so we didn’t wait for the pizzas to cool.

Angela's Finished Pizza. YUM!

When we were in Wisconsin in November, Graham’s Grandma Sis gave us a new pizza cutter. I think it looks a bit like PacMan, but damn it works well.

Using Grandma Sis's amazing pizza cutter

Even better? You can pull the white disc out of the blue case for super easy cleaning. Brilliant! Such good usability!

The verdict?

G: “It’s not a bad wheat crust. It’s not cardboard like most of them are.”

A: “Holy my god it takes a long time to make these.  But the results… They’re probably worth it. Thank goodness I froze more than half the dough so we don’t have to wait this long again.”

Whole Wheat Pizza Crust

Adapted from Mark Bittman’s “Whole Wheat Pizza Dough” in How to Cook Everything Vegetarian.

Ingredients:

  • 1.5 cups bread flour
  • 1.5 cups whole wheat flour, plus more for work surfaces
  • 2 tsp. active yeast
  • 2 tsp coarse sea salt
  • 1.5 cups filtered water, at room temp.
  • 3 tbsp extra virgin olive oil, plus more for oiling the rising bowl

Method:

  1. In a food processor fitted with the dough attachment, combine dry ingredients.  Add water and olive oil through the tube feeder.  Process until combined and slightly sticky. If the dough is too sticky, add a teaspoon of whole wheat flour until desired consistency.  If the dough is too dry, add a teaspoon of water until it reaches desired consistency.
  2. Move dough to a floured work surface, knead by hand and form a ball.
  3. Coat the inside of a metal bowl with olive oil. Place dough ball in bowl and cover with a towel or plastic wrap.  Let dough rise in dark location (I used a turned off, empty oven) for 1-2 hours. (I did 1.25 hrs. Ideally the dough should double in size.)
  4. When the dough is ready, divide on a floured work surface.  Form balls, then gently flatten into desired shape by pressing from the center out.  The desired thickness is between .25″-.34″.
  5. Again cover dough and let rise for ~20 minutes.  (There’s no need to move to another location.)
  6. When the dough is ready, move to a pizza stone and add ingredients.  Bake in oven preheated to 500 degrees for 10-12 minutes.

Chipotle Pizza Sauce

Adapted from Mark Bittman’s “Fast Tomato Sauce” in How to Cook Everything Vegetarian.  The pizza sauce can be juicy; I recommend using a slotted spoon to drain juices before adding pizza sauce to crust.

Ingredients:

  • 3 tbsp olive oil
  • 1 med yellow onion, finely chopped
  • 2 cans diced tomatoes
  • 2 chipotle peppers, sliced in half with loose seeds removed
  • large pinch sea salt
  • freshly ground pepper to taste

?Method:

  1. In a medium sauce plan, heat olive oil.  Add onion and saute until soft.
  2. Add diced tomatoes and chipotle pepper.
  3. Bring mixture to a simmer for 25 minutes, then remove chipotle pieces.  Salt and pepper to taste.

{ 2 comments… read them below or add one }

Lacey January 6, 2010 at 11:24 am

So fortuitous that you posted this–yesterday morning I began to thaw my frozen pizza dough in the fridge for use in pizza last night. After making Bittman’s dough in the food processor a few weeks ago, I wondered why any food processor-owning person would choose to make it any other way. It was WAY EASY.

I’m sure you could cut in some whole wheat pastry flour into some regular bread flour for something healthier than white crust, but not as dense as whole wheat. I’ll try it out and let you know!

Also–I think you’ve inspired me to create my own sauce. I’ve been using marinara sauce up until now but if I’m going to all the trouble to make homemade pizza, I might as well go all the way.

Angela January 6, 2010 at 10:47 pm

Oh gosh, the food processor whips up dough lickity split. Even better? I don’t have to do the dishes!

For this pizza crust I actually used a 50/50 mix of traditional whole wheat flour & bread flour and it wasn’t bad. Graham usually HATES whole wheat, and even he liked this. (Which, quite honestly, is a coup. He’s instinctively avoidant of anything containing things like FIBER.)

I usually reserve whole wheat pastry flour for baking treats. I believe the whole wheat pastry flour has less protein in it than traditional whole wheat flour (3g fiber-3 g protein @ 100 calories in pastry vs 4g fiber -4g protein @ 110 calories for traditional whole wheat.)
—–
(Okay… I did some research. I had to; I think my next project is going to be homemade bread.)

The quantity of the proteins contained in the flour serve as the best indicator of the quality of the bread dough and the finished bread. While bread can be made from all-purpose wheat flour, for quality bread a specialty bread flour, containing more protein, is recommended.

—-

Sauce is shamefully easy. Really. Everyone should make their own. (As Bittman recommends.)

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